Assuming your place of residence is inland and not by the ocean or gulf, would you evacuate if a Hurricane was heading your way? Would you evacuate if the Mayor said it was "Mandatory"?
Here is what I am considering. I live in Houston 40 miles inland and above sea level. Whatsmore I live in the west side of houston which is even better. Last year when the mayor and governor said that Rita is heading our way (it was at 3 or 4 days still out in the gulf ) they said that everyone should get out of Houston and evacuate. Galveston and some parts of Southeast Harris county (Houston) were mandatory. Those area's I can understand as they are so close to the water, and Galveston would have probably have been flooded.
That Wednesday the freeways and roads in all directions from Houston were packed. hwy 59 was packed all the way up to Texarkana, I-45 was packed all the way up to Dallas, I-10 was packed from San Antonio to Beaumont. These freeways were parkinglots for the next 4 days. Everyone panicked! Everyone was saying to me, "you need to get out!! I can't believe you are staying!!" They felt so justified in what they were doing, they felt they had to insult you for staying. My mother and grandmother were at the house. My dad and I in separate cars and from different directions were coming into Houston Wednesday night (Rita didn't hit shore until Sunday if I remember right). It was like the movie Independence Day. Everyone else was trying to get out of the city, we were the only ones trying to get in.
In my mind, this was insane (not to mention irresponsible on the part of the officials. As far as I am concerned, they are the reason those old people were killed in that fire on I-45 South of Dallas with all those cars jammed up on the hwy).
You can't evacuate 3 million people in one city. It's a disaster. Houston didn't need to be evacuated.
We have so many Yankee newcomers in Houston who don't know about Hurricanes plus all the media hype about New Orleans (the bowl under sea level) plus the moron mayor and other officials who prematurely told everyone to get out.
Our family on the other hand has experienced Hurricanes in Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi. The most recent was Alicia (I think cat 3 or 4) back in 1983 or 84. Family members in other parts of the South didn't think anything of it, they just called up and made sure we had everything we needed to ride out the weather.
All this hype about winds tearing houses in two, trees flying around and tornedo's cropping down every two minutes and flooding is exaggerated and hyped up by the media. (Depends on the age and structure and condition of the house. Tornedos happen from time to time you can't avoid them. Trees don't just get pulled up, the ones that do are usually half dead or all the way dead and roots are weak and Houston is well above sea level and is 40 miles inland and will not flood from a Hurricane) If it's your time to die, it's your time to die. I would certainly be better off inside my house than on the freeway parked in traffic if a hurricane came through.
Even if evacuation was mandatory, I would not leave. Police could come arrest me (but I don't think they'd have the time or the inclination to do it) Even if they do, the alternative is to get out and park in traffic in misery with everyone else. I'd rather spend the night in jail.
Our house has plenty of guns and ammo for us to take care of it. There was no mass halted exodus when Alicia came through. Back then most people who lived here were more local and we didn't have FOX and CNN to scare us
Here is what I am considering. I live in Houston 40 miles inland and above sea level. Whatsmore I live in the west side of houston which is even better. Last year when the mayor and governor said that Rita is heading our way (it was at 3 or 4 days still out in the gulf ) they said that everyone should get out of Houston and evacuate. Galveston and some parts of Southeast Harris county (Houston) were mandatory. Those area's I can understand as they are so close to the water, and Galveston would have probably have been flooded.
That Wednesday the freeways and roads in all directions from Houston were packed. hwy 59 was packed all the way up to Texarkana, I-45 was packed all the way up to Dallas, I-10 was packed from San Antonio to Beaumont. These freeways were parkinglots for the next 4 days. Everyone panicked! Everyone was saying to me, "you need to get out!! I can't believe you are staying!!" They felt so justified in what they were doing, they felt they had to insult you for staying. My mother and grandmother were at the house. My dad and I in separate cars and from different directions were coming into Houston Wednesday night (Rita didn't hit shore until Sunday if I remember right). It was like the movie Independence Day. Everyone else was trying to get out of the city, we were the only ones trying to get in.
In my mind, this was insane (not to mention irresponsible on the part of the officials. As far as I am concerned, they are the reason those old people were killed in that fire on I-45 South of Dallas with all those cars jammed up on the hwy).
You can't evacuate 3 million people in one city. It's a disaster. Houston didn't need to be evacuated.
We have so many Yankee newcomers in Houston who don't know about Hurricanes plus all the media hype about New Orleans (the bowl under sea level) plus the moron mayor and other officials who prematurely told everyone to get out.
Our family on the other hand has experienced Hurricanes in Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi. The most recent was Alicia (I think cat 3 or 4) back in 1983 or 84. Family members in other parts of the South didn't think anything of it, they just called up and made sure we had everything we needed to ride out the weather.
All this hype about winds tearing houses in two, trees flying around and tornedo's cropping down every two minutes and flooding is exaggerated and hyped up by the media. (Depends on the age and structure and condition of the house. Tornedos happen from time to time you can't avoid them. Trees don't just get pulled up, the ones that do are usually half dead or all the way dead and roots are weak and Houston is well above sea level and is 40 miles inland and will not flood from a Hurricane) If it's your time to die, it's your time to die. I would certainly be better off inside my house than on the freeway parked in traffic if a hurricane came through.
Even if evacuation was mandatory, I would not leave. Police could come arrest me (but I don't think they'd have the time or the inclination to do it) Even if they do, the alternative is to get out and park in traffic in misery with everyone else. I'd rather spend the night in jail.
Our house has plenty of guns and ammo for us to take care of it. There was no mass halted exodus when Alicia came through. Back then most people who lived here were more local and we didn't have FOX and CNN to scare us